- Joined
- Apr 23, 2021
- Messages
- 157
- Reaction score
- 264
- Location
- Orkney
- Hive Type
- Smith
- Number of Hives
- 11 and a few poly nucs
I only harvested mid August and I did keep the supers from each apiary separate to start with. But because It would only have been in small batches I thought it’s not worth the hassle. Last year some of us here had heather honey in the same frame’s as our summer honey and I managed to extract a good amount of mine . In the end my customers had a new flavour in their jars and I just told them it was different. I didn’t get any negative feedback.I find me retailers like it that I keep my honey batches separate, you don’t have to label each type up as say Hawthorn or lime just use a spring label for spring honey and a summer for the summer batches, the retailer can inform the rest.what works for me might not work for everyone BUT a mentored friend of mine who keeps batches seperate had a first prize at the south staffs honey show with his lime honey from my reared bees he has.
It is more time consuming extracting each super separately and I have 4 different named labels but using the same design I could if I wanted to have more, my point: if you have a good design the type of honey is only changing the words and possibly honey analysis/ honey tasting and knowing what the bees have foraged on.
Mark
I think it was about 14 of us who took our own honey to an association meeting last autumn for everyone to try. Considering the size of our mainland and the proximity of some of our apiaries we could still taste a difference between nearly all of the samples.
So how far do you narrow down the term local honey. Is it our county, our town or even our apiary.
Being sensible I think most customers would be looking for county or a geographical area.
My tin hat is at the ready.